Abstract
Prolonged exposure to abused drugs such as opiates causes decreased response to the drug; this reduced sensitivity is thought to be due to the loss of receptors, or down-regulation. The molecular mechanism of the opiate receptor down-regulation is not known. In order to address this, we generated a number of mutants of the delta opiate receptor COOH-terminal tail. When expressed in the Chinese hamster ovary cells, both the wild type and the receptor with a deletion of 37 COOH-terminal residues bind diprenorphine with comparable affinities and show similar decreases in cAMP levels in response to D-Ala2, D-Leu5, enkephalin (DADLE). However, the truncated receptor does not show down-regulation from the cell surface upon prolonged exposure (2-48 h) to DADLE. In contrast, both the wild type receptor and the receptor with the deletion of only 15 COOH-terminal residues show substantial down-regulation upon long term DADLE treatment. These results suggest that the region located between 15 and 37 residues from the COOH terminus is involved in the receptor down-regulation. In order to identify residues that play a key role in down-regulation, point mutations of residues within this region were examined for their ability to modulate receptor down-regulation. The receptor with a mutation of Thr353 to Ala does not down-regulate, whereas the receptor with a mutation of Ser344 to Gly down-regulates with a time course similar to that of the wild type receptor. Taken together, these results suggest that the COOH-terminal tail is not essential for functional coupling but is necessary for down-regulation and that Thr353 is critical for the agonist-mediated down-regulation of the delta opiate receptor.
Highlights
Cell lines that express high levels of opiate receptors have been used for studies with agonist-mediated receptor function such as down-regulation [2,3,4]
We find that a portion of the COOH-terminal tail is necessary for the agonist-mediated down-regulation and that Thr353 plays an important role in the down-regulation of the ␦ opiate receptor
We chose Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells as a suitable host cell line to express high levels of delta opiate receptor, since CHO cells have been useful for stable expression of a number of neuropeptide receptors (10 –14)
Summary
Cell lines that express high levels of opiate receptors have been used for studies with agonist-mediated receptor function such as down-regulation [2,3,4]. We find that a portion of the COOH-terminal tail is necessary for the agonist-mediated down-regulation and that Thr353 plays an important role in the down-regulation of the ␦ opiate receptor. The cell lines expressing wild type or mutated ␦ opiate receptor exhibited high affinity for diprenorphine (Table I).
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